Wednesday, July 18, 2012

The Beginning of Breakthrough


Students responding to God's call to give him their future
Just last Thursday we hit a transformational moment with the 85 LAUP participants.

As students spent the week studying Scripture and hearing teaching about money, something broke open inside their hearts.  As students approached the front of the room to symbolically offer their treasures to God, the concept of God’s love for the poor somehow went from a cerebral idea to a heartfelt challenge to which they needed to personally respond.  They began to seek the link between the poor families they are working each day and their own choices of career, lifestyle, and finances in the future.  Students gave God control of their dreams and plans in very specific ways.

I’ve never seen students this engaged with the challenge to live as good news to the poor this early in the summer...I can hardly wait to see how much God will do by the end!

Please pray with us that God will keep moving deeply in students' hearts:  that each and every student will wrestle with God's personal challenge to them to live as good news to the poor, and that they will sweetly, intimately, and specifically hear God's invitation closer to himself.

Monday, July 9, 2012

Poetry on Poverty

At the heart of LAUP is more than just helping students gain God's heart for the poor.  It also involves identifying the competing values already embedded within them through our culture.  We are helping students make choices out of a view of the world that's driven by the "survival of the fittest" to make space for a view of the world built on the principles of the Kingdom of God.

Sam Rickert working on poetry at the LAUP house
Last Thursday, at our first weekly LAUP gathering, one of the students from our artist team--Sam Rickert--shared a spoken-word poetry piece that captured the foundation that we've laid.  Reading it doesn't do it justice, but you'll still get the idea:

Americans fight hard for freedom, for individualism...let's look at where that's left us.

We love our individual independence, not realizing the isolation conseqence;
We hope to be a self-made man, which probably means a wealth-made man.
This business world lives on competition, so we push the weak down without condition;
We live with a sense of entitlement, though you won't find that in God's covenant.
Most Americans believe "God helps those who help themselves" is biblical, just shows our starvation of the scriptural.

See entitlement leads to love-malnutrition, with western churches dying as the fruition.
The American Dream promises opportunity, but often leads to egocentricity;
We are told "fake it till you make it", God says, "I'll take your mask and break it."

Basically this rhyme's about
not I but we,
about us not me; 
We must live in unity
if we will ever be a kingdom community,
and a generation with eyes to see
the sins of our culture.

Let renewal rain down
by our repentance give God his crown.

As you pray for us, please ask God to move powerfully in the short time we have with the LAUP students.  As our directors team has sought God, we have felt moved by God to recognize the urgency of what's happening in them:  though they have the rest of their lives to live, what happens in their hearts over this next month has a dramatic effect upon the trajectory of the rest of their lives.

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

LAUP's first week


The LAUP 2012 interns, discussing Luke


What a first week of LAUP we’ve had!
 
Starting with Jesus’ inaugural address in Luke 4—the Spirit of the Lord is upon me to preach good news to the poor—we immersed students in God’s heart for the poor and the city, and challenged them to recognize the brokenness in our world.

The first day, after looking at economic and racial demographic information on the city of Los Angeles, all ninety of us went to Skid Row to let God turn statistics into people.  As we arrived, the brokenness and despair were palpable:  people passed out on the sidewalk, marijuana being smoked in public, and a smell of urine, trash, and neglect.  One of our female students, Maria, shared her difficulty in recognizing the Skid Row homeless as human, and recoiled from making any physical contact.  Yet by the end of a fifteen minute lunch, something had begun to change.  In saying goodbye, the homeless woman embraced her and gave her a kiss on the cheek…as she did, Maria later shared that she sensed God speaking to her, “You are both my daughters.”

Students discussing issues underneath the "web" of injustice
We also made a point to help students understand the complexity of urban issues.  Each time we discussed the brokenness in the city, students identified issues (unemployment, drug abuse, domestic violence, etc.) wrote them on posters, and hung them from the balcony of the church.  As they saw links between these issues—unemployment can lead to depression, which can lead to drug abuse, which can lead to prostitution—they tied yarn between the posters.  By the end of the week, our sessions were a parable for the true spiritual state of the city:  continually living under an oppressive web of interconnected issues of injustice.

We ended the week speaking about God’s coming Kingdom which has been bursting through into our world since Jesus came to earth.  As we worshiped and proclaimed God’s good news of healing and redemption, students cut each piece of yarn, one by one.

Pray with me that this will be more than a metaphor, but that students will let God’s love for the poor seep into their hearts, and that through their own lives, they will see his Kingdom coming and his will being done in the city, as it is in heaven.